Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

INJURY ACCIDENTS change with pandemic behavior.

- TODD C. FRANKEL

The pandemic shifted how Americans got hurt last year, when months of lockdowns and stay-home orders reshaped everyday routines and presented unfamiliar dangers, according to a study released Thursday by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Sports injuries collapsed. Injuries from fireworks and bicycles spiked. Severe injuries caused by home power tools soared. More people were hurt by chain saws and skateboard­s. But bad injuries on playground equipment plummeted.

Despite the changes, the number of people treated in hospital emergency rooms for severe product-related injuries remained flat, falling a negligible 1% from March to September during the pandemic last year, compared with the same period the year before.

People still got hurt, just in different ways.

“That’s what we anticipate­d would happen. But there were notable shifts in the kinds of activities where the injuries occurred,” said Ik-Whan Kwon, an emeritus professor and founder of a consumer product safety program at Saint Louis University.

The safety agency injury data provides a fresh hint of how the pandemic — and attempts to curtail it — affected everyday life. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that calls to poison centers about cleaners and disinfecta­nts increased sharply at the start of the pandemic. Burn injuries jumped last year as people cooked more at home.

The injury data gives an important but incomplete picture of what occurred because it is limited to informatio­n from hospital emergency rooms. And the pandemic appeared to cause people to second-guess whether they needed to go to the hospital. So while the number of severe injuries stayed flat, the number of minor product injuries — where they were treated and released or left without being seen by staffers — fell by 27%.

The safety agency also found that the number of product-related deaths reported at hospital ERs increased 10%. Most of that appeared to come from more falls at home. But the agency said that the 5,500 deaths reported over six months last year represente­d a small fraction of the 48,000 expected annual product-related deaths and that more investigat­ion is needed.

The pandemic led to changes in routines, which led to new risks.

With many schools closed and organized sports on hiatus, the number of minor injuries from track-and-field equipment was down nearly 80%, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Soccer, hockey, baseball and football saw drops of at least two-thirds in their injury numbers.

While most of the decreases were concentrat­ed among school-age children, the number of people older than 70 playing any sport also saw a precipitou­s decline in injuries.

The biggest increases in severe injuries came from fireworks — which nearly tripled — and home power tools, which more than doubled. Cleaning agents were blamed for almost twice as many severe injuries.

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